Dynamic Capitalism. By EDMUND S. PHELPS October 10, 2006

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Dynamic Capitalism. By EDMUND S. PHELPS October 10, 2006"

Transcription

1 Dynamic Capitalism By EDMUND S. PHELPS October 10, 2006 There are two economic systems in the West. Several nations -- including the U.S., Canada and the U.K. -- have a private-ownership system marked by great openness to the implementation of new commercial ideas coming from entrepreneurs, and by a pluralism of views among the financiers who select the ideas to nurture by providing the capital and incentives necessary for their development. Although much innovation comes from established companies, as in pharmaceuticals, much comes from start-ups, particularly the most novel innovations. This is free enterprise, a k a capitalism. The other system -- in Western Continental Europe -- though also based on private ownership, has been modified by the introduction of institutions aimed at protecting the interests of "stakeholders" and "social partners." The system's institutions include big employer confederations, big unions and monopolistic banks. Since World War II, a great deal of liberalization has taken place. But new corporatist institutions have sprung up: Co-determination ( cogestion, or Mitbestimmung) has brought "worker councils" (Betriebsrat ); and in Germany, a union representative sits on the investment committee of corporations. The system operates to discourage changes such as relocations and the entry of new firms, and its performance depends on established companies in cooperation with local and national banks. What it lacks in flexibility it tries to compensate for with technological sophistication. So different is this system that it has its own name: the "social market economy" in Germany, "social democracy" in France and "concertazione" in Italy. Dynamism and Fertility The American and Continental systems are not operationally equivalent, contrary to some neoclassical views. Let me use the word "dynamism" to mean the fertility of the economy in coming up with innovative ideas believed to be technologically feasible and profitable -- in short, the economy's talent at commercially successful innovating. In this terminology, the free enterprise system is structured in such a way that it facilitates and stimulates dynamism while the Continental system impedes and discourages it. Wasn't the Continental system designed to stifle dynamism? When building the massive structures of corporatism in interwar Italy, theoreticians explained that their new system would be more dynamic than capitalism -- maybe not more fertile in little ideas, such as might come to petitbourgeois entrepreneurs, but certainly in big ideas. Not having to fear fluid market conditions, an entrenched company could afford to develop radical innovation. And with industrial confederations and state mediation available, such companies could arrange to avoid costly duplication of their investments. The state and its instruments, the big banks, could intervene to settle conflicts about the economy's direction. Thus the corporatist economy was expected to usher in a new futurismo that was famously symbolized by Severini's paintings of fast trains. (What was important was that the train was rushing forward, not that it ran on time.) Friedrich Hayek, in the late 1930s and early '40s, began the modern theory of how a capitalist system, if pure enough, would possess the greatest dynamism -- not socialism and not corporatism. First, virtually everyone right down to the humblest employees has "know-how," some of what Seite 1/5

2 Michael Polanyi called "personal knowledge" and some merely private knowledge, and out of that an idea may come that few others would have. In its openness to the ideas of all or most participants, the capitalist economy tends to generate a plethora of new ideas. Second, the pluralism of experience that the financiers bring to bear in their decisions gives a wide range of entrepreneurial ideas a chance of insightful evaluation. And, importantly, the financier and the entrepreneur do not need the approval of the state or of social partners. Nor are they accountable later on to such social bodies if the project goes badly, not even to the financier's investors. So projects can be undertaken that would be too opaque and uncertain for the state or social partners to endorse. Lastly, the pluralism of knowledge and experience that managers and consumers bring to bear in deciding which innovations to try, and which to adopt, is crucial in giving a good chance to the most promising innovations launched. Where the Continental system convenes experts to set a product standard before any version is launched, capitalism gives market access to all versions. The issues swirling around capitalism today concern the consequences of its dynamism. The main benefit of an innovative economy is commonly said to be a higher level of productivity -- and thus higher hourly wages and a higher quality of life. There is a huge element of truth in this belief, no matter how many tens of qualifications might be in order. Much of the huge rise of productivity since the 1920s can be traced to new commercial products and business methods developed and launched in the U.S. and kindred economies. (These include household appliances, sound movies, frozen food, pasteurized orange juice, television, semiconductor chips, the Internet browser, the redesign of cinemas and recent retailing methods.) There were often engineering tasks along the way, yet business entrepreneurs were the drivers. There is one conceivable qualification that ought to be addressed. Is productivity not finally at the point, after 150 years of growth, that having yet another year's growth would be of negligible value? D.H. Lawrence spoke of America's "everlasting slog." Whatever the answer, it is important to note that advances in productivity, in generally pulling up wage rates, make it affordable for low-wage people to avoid work that is tedious or grueling or dangerous in favor of work that is more interesting and formative. Of course, productivity levels in the smaller countries will always owe more to innovations developed abroad than to those they develop themselves. Some might suspect that the domestic market is so tiny in a country such as Iceland, for instance, that even in per capita terms only a very small number of homemade innovations would bring a satisfactory productivity gain -- and thus an adequate rate of return. In fact, most of the Continental economies, including the large ones, have been content to sail in the slipstream of a handful of economies that do the preponderance of the world's innovating. The late Harvard economist Zvi Griliches commented approvingly that in such a policy, the Europeans "are so smart." I take a different view. For one thing, it is good business to be an innovative force in the "global economy." Globalization has diminished the importance of scale as well as distance. Tiny Denmark sets its sights on markets in the U.S., the EU and elsewhere. Iceland has entered into European banking and biogenetics. France has long done this -- and can do more of it. But it could do so more successfully if it did not insulate its innovational decisions so much from evaluations by financial markets -- including the stock market -- as Airbus does. The U.S. is already demonstrably in the global innovation business. To date, there is an adequate rate of return to be expected from Seite 2/5

3 "investing" in the conception, development and marketing of innovations for the global economy -- a return on a par with the return from investing in plant and equipment, software and other business capital. That is a better option for Americans than suffering diminished returns from investing solely in the classical avenue of fixed capital. I would, however, stress a benefit of dynamism that I believe to be far more important. Instituting a high level of dynamism, so that the economy is fired by the new ideas of entrepreneurs, serves to transform the workplace -- in the firms developing an innovation and also in the firms dealing with the innovations. The challenges that arise in developing a new idea and in gaining its acceptance in the marketplace provide the workforce with high levels of mental stimulation, problem-solving, employee-engagement and, thus, personal growth. Note that an individual working alone cannot easily create the continual arrival of new challenges. It "takes a village," preferably the whole society. The concept that people need problem-solving and intellectual development originates in Europe: There is the classical Aristotle, who writes of the "development of talents"; later the Renaissance figure Cellini, who jubilates in achievement; and Cervantes, who evokes vitality and challenge. In the 20th century, Alfred Marshall observed that the job is in the worker's thoughts for most of the day. And Gunnar Myrdal wrote in 1933 that the time will soon come when more satisfaction derives from the job than from consuming. The American application of this Aristotelian perspective is the thesis that most, if not all, of such self-realization in modern societies can come only from a career. Today we cannot go tilting at windmills, but we can take on the challenges of a career. If a challenging career is not the main hope for self-realization, what else could be? Even to be a good mother, it helps to have the experience of work outside the home. I must mention a "derived" benefit from dynamism that flows from its effects on productivity and self-realization. A more innovative economy tends to devote more resources to investing of all kinds -- in new employees and customers as well as new office and factory space. And although this may come about through a shift of resources from the consumer-goods sector, it also comes through the recruitment of new participants to the labor force. Also, the resulting increase of employeeengagement serves to lower quit rates and, hence, to make possible a reduction of the "natural" unemployment rate. Thus, high dynamism tends to bring a pervasive prosperity to the economy on top of the productivity advances and all the self-realization going on. True, that may not be pronounced every month or year. Just as the creative artist does not create all the time, but rather in episodes and breaks, so the dynamic economy has heightened high-frequency volatility and may go through wide swings. Perhaps this volatility is not only normal but also productive from the point of view of creativity and, ultimately, achievement. Ideals and Reality I know I have drawn an idealized portrait of capitalism: The reality in the U.S. and elsewhere is much less impressive. But we can, nevertheless, ask whether there is any evidence in favor of these claims on behalf of dynamism. Do we find evidence of greater benefits of dynamism in the relatively capitalist economies than in the Continental economies as currently structured? In the Continent's Big Three, hourly labor productivity is lower than in the U.S. Labor-force participation is also generally lower. And here is new evidence: The World Values Survey indicates that the Seite 3/5

4 Continent's workers find less job satisfaction and derive less pride from the work they do in their job. Dynamism does have its downside. The same capitalist dynamism that adds to the desirability of jobs also adds to their precariousness. The strong possibility of a general slump can cause anxiety. But we need some perspective. Even a market socialist economy might be unpredictable: In truth, the Continental economies are also susceptible to wide swings. In fact, it is the corporatist economies that have suffered the widest swings in recent decades. In the U.S. and the U.K., unemployment rates have been remarkably steady for 20 years. It may be that when the Continental economies are down, the paucity of their dynamism makes it harder for them to find something new on which to base a comeback. The U.S. economy might be said to suffer from incomplete inclusion of the disadvantaged. But that is less a fault of capitalism than of electoral politics. The U.S. economy is not unambiguously worse than the Continental ones in this regard: Low-wage workers at least have access to jobs, which is of huge value to them in their efforts to be role models in their family and community. In any case, we can fix the problem. Why, then, if the "downside" is so exaggerated, is capitalism so reviled in Western Continental Europe? It may be that elements of capitalism are seen by some in Europe as morally wrong in the same way that birth control or nuclear power or sweatshops are seen by some as simply wrong in spite of the consequences of barring them. And it appears that the recent street protesters associate business with established wealth; in their minds, giving greater latitude to businesses would increase the privileges of old wealth. By an "entrepreneur" they appear to mean a rich owner of a bank or factory, while for Schumpeter and Knight it meant a newcomer, a parvenu who is an outsider. A tremendous confusion is created by associating "capitalism" with entrenched wealth and power. The textbook capitalism of Schumpeter and Hayek means opening up the economy to new industries, opening industries to start-up companies, and opening existing companies to new owners and new managers. It is inseparable from an adequate degree of competition. Monopolies like Microsoft are a deviation from the model. It would be unhistorical to say that capitalism in my textbook sense of the term does not and cannot exist. Tocqueville marveled at the relatively pure capitalism he found in America. The greater involvement of Americans in governing themselves, their broader education and their wider equality of opportunity, all encourage the emergence of the "man of action" with the "skill" to "grasp the chance of the moment." I want to conclude by arguing that generating more dynamism through the injection of more capitalism does serve economic justice. We all feel good to see people freed to pursue their dreams. Yet Hayek and Ayn Rand went too far in taking such freedom to be an absolute, the consequences be damned. In judging whether a nation's economic system is acceptable, its consequences for the prospects of the realization of people's dreams matter, too. Since the economy is a system in which people interact, the endeavors of some may damage the prospects of others. So a persuasive justification of well-functioning capitalism must be grounded on all its consequences, not just those called freedoms. Seite 4/5

5 To argue that the consequences of capitalism are just requires some conception of economic justice. I broadly subscribe to the conception of economic justice in the work by John Rawls. In any organization of the economy, the participants will score unequally in how far they manage to go in their personal growth. An organization that leaves the bottom score lower than it would be under another feasible organization is unjust. So a new organization that raised the scores of some, though at the expense of reducing scores at the bottom, would not be justified. Yet a high score is just if it does not hurt others. "Envy is the vice of mankind," said Kant, whom Rawls greatly admired. The 'Least Advantaged' What would be the consequence, from this Rawlsian point of view, of releasing entrepreneurs onto the economy? In the classic case to which Rawls devoted his attention, the lowest score is always that of workers with the lowest wage, whom he called the "least advantaged": Their self-realization lies mostly in marrying, raising children and participating in the community, and it will be greater the higher their wage. So if the increased dynamism created by liberating private entrepreneurs and financiers tends to raise productivity, as I argue -- and if that in turn pulls up those bottom wages, or at any rate does not lower them -- it is not unjust. Does anyone doubt that the past two centuries of commercial innovations have pulled up wage rates at the low end and everywhere else in the distribution? Yet the tone here is wrong. As Kant also said, persons are not to be made instruments for the gain of others. Suppose the wage of the lowest- paid workers was foreseen to be reduced over the entire future by innovations conceived by entrepreneurs. Are those whose dream is to find personal development through a career as an entrepreneur not to be permitted to pursue their dream? To respond, we have to go outside Rawls's classical model, in which work is all about money. In an economy in which entrepreneurs are forbidden to pursue their self-realization, they have the bottom scores in self-realization -- no matter if they take paying jobs instead -- and that counts whether or not they were born the "least advantaged." So even if their activities did come at the expense of the lowest-paid workers, Rawlsian justice in this extended sense requires that entrepreneurs be accorded enough opportunity to raise their self-realization score up to the level of the lowest-paid workers -- and higher, of course, if workers are not damaged by support for entrepreneurship. In this case, too, then, the introduction of entrepreneurial dynamism serves to raise Rawls's bottom scores. Actual capitalism departs from well-functioning capitalism -- monopolies too big to break up, undetected cartels, regulatory failures and political corruption. Capitalism in its innovations plants the seeds of its own encrustation with entrenched power. These departures weigh heavily on the rewards earned, particularly the wages of the least advantaged, and give a bad name to capitalism. But I must insist: It would be a non sequitur to give up on private entrepreneurs and financiers as the wellspring of dynamism merely because the fruits of their dynamism would likely be less than they could be in a less imperfect system. I conclude that capitalism is justified -- normally by the expectable benefits to the lowest-paid workers but, failing that, by the injustice of depriving entrepreneurial types (as well as other creative people) of opportunities for their self-expression. Mr. Phelps, the McVickar Professor of Political Economy at Columbia, was awarded the 2006 Nobel Prize for economics. Seite 5/5

CAPITALISM VS. CORPORATISM Edmund S. Phelps a a

CAPITALISM VS. CORPORATISM Edmund S. Phelps a a This article was downloaded by: [Columbia University] On: 3 March 2010 Access details: Access Details: [subscription number 918253540] Publisher Routledge Informa Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered

More information

SMART STRATEGIES TO INCREASE PROSPERITY AND LIMIT BRAIN DRAIN IN CENTRAL EUROPE 1

SMART STRATEGIES TO INCREASE PROSPERITY AND LIMIT BRAIN DRAIN IN CENTRAL EUROPE 1 Summary of the Expert Conference: SMART STRATEGIES TO INCREASE PROSPERITY AND LIMIT BRAIN DRAIN IN CENTRAL EUROPE 1 6 November 2018 STATE OF PLAY AND CHALLENGES Citizens of new EU member states are increasingly

More information

Dynamism, Inclusion and Economic Policy

Dynamism, Inclusion and Economic Policy {LaMatanza2008May22corr.doc} Dynamism, Inclusion and Economic Policy Edmund S. Phelps * My thesis in recent years is that a just society requires a good economy and a good economy requires high dynamism

More information

PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMICS & POLITICS

PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMICS & POLITICS PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMICS & POLITICS LECTURE 14 DATE 9 FEBRUARY 2017 LECTURER JULIAN REISS Today s agenda Today we are going to look again at a single book: Joseph Schumpeter s Capitalism, Socialism, and

More information

Philosophy 285 Fall, 2007 Dick Arneson Overview of John Rawls, A Theory of Justice. Views of Rawls s achievement:

Philosophy 285 Fall, 2007 Dick Arneson Overview of John Rawls, A Theory of Justice. Views of Rawls s achievement: 1 Philosophy 285 Fall, 2007 Dick Arneson Overview of John Rawls, A Theory of Justice Views of Rawls s achievement: G. A. Cohen: I believe that at most two books in the history of Western political philosophy

More information

Subverting the Orthodoxy

Subverting the Orthodoxy Subverting the Orthodoxy Rousseau, Smith and Marx Chau Kwan Yat Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Adam Smith, and Karl Marx each wrote at a different time, yet their works share a common feature: they display a certain

More information

Economics has been defined as the study of how people respond to incentives.

Economics has been defined as the study of how people respond to incentives. Unit 1 Notes Incentives Economics has been defined as the study of how people respond to incentives. An incentive is a factor that motivates someone to behave in a certain way. Incentives Positive incentives

More information

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapt er. Key Concepts

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapt er. Key Concepts Chapt er 6 ECONOMIC GROWTH* Key Concepts The Basics of Economic Growth Economic growth is the expansion of production possibilities. The growth rate is the annual percentage change of a variable. The growth

More information

Why Does Inequality Matter? T. M. Scanlon. Chapter 8: Unequal Outcomes. It is well known that there has been an enormous increase in inequality in the

Why Does Inequality Matter? T. M. Scanlon. Chapter 8: Unequal Outcomes. It is well known that there has been an enormous increase in inequality in the Why Does Inequality Matter? T. M. Scanlon Chapter 8: Unequal Outcomes It is well known that there has been an enormous increase in inequality in the United States and other developed economies in recent

More information

Using the Index of Economic Freedom

Using the Index of Economic Freedom Using the Index of Economic Freedom A Practical Guide for Citizens and Leaders The Center for International Trade and Economics at The Heritage Foundation Ryan Olson For two decades, the Index of Economic

More information

Capitalism: Good or Evil?

Capitalism: Good or Evil? Level 6-9 Capitalism: Good or Evil? Diana Ferraro Summary This book is about the pros and cons of living in a capitalist system. Contents Before Reading Think Ahead... 2 Vocabulary... 3 During Reading

More information

Introductory Remarks By Dr. Daniela Gressani, Vice President for the Middle East and North Africa Region of the World Bank

Introductory Remarks By Dr. Daniela Gressani, Vice President for the Middle East and North Africa Region of the World Bank 1 Introductory Remarks By Dr. Daniela Gressani, Vice President for the Middle East and North Africa Region of the World Bank Your Majesty, Excellencies, Honorable Guests, Ladies and Gentlemen, Jordan High

More information

Future EU Trade Policy: Achieving Europe's Strategic Goals

Future EU Trade Policy: Achieving Europe's Strategic Goals European Commission Speech [Check against delivery] Future EU Trade Policy: Achieving Europe's Strategic Goals 4 May 2015 Cecilia Malmström, Commissioner for Trade Washington DC Centre for Strategic and

More information

Lesson 10 What Is Economic Justice?

Lesson 10 What Is Economic Justice? Lesson 10 What Is Economic Justice? The students play the Veil of Ignorance game to reveal how altering people s selfinterest transforms their vision of economic justice. OVERVIEW Economics Economics has

More information

Rule of Law: Economic Prosperity Requires the Rule of Law By J. Kenneth Blackwell

Rule of Law: Economic Prosperity Requires the Rule of Law By J. Kenneth Blackwell By J. Kenneth Blackwell America is the most prosperous society in the history of mankind, and many factors have contributed to its success. Some credit our unparalleled university system. Others note our

More information

RECONCILING LIBERTY AND EQUALITY: JUSTICE AS FAIRNESS. John Rawls s A Theory of Justice presents a theory called justice as fairness.

RECONCILING LIBERTY AND EQUALITY: JUSTICE AS FAIRNESS. John Rawls s A Theory of Justice presents a theory called justice as fairness. RECONCILING LIBERTY AND EQUALITY: JUSTICE AS FAIRNESS 1. Two Principles of Justice John Rawls s A Theory of Justice presents a theory called justice as fairness. That theory comprises two principles of

More information

HIGHLIGHTS. There is a clear trend in the OECD area towards. which is reflected in the economic and innovative performance of certain OECD countries.

HIGHLIGHTS. There is a clear trend in the OECD area towards. which is reflected in the economic and innovative performance of certain OECD countries. HIGHLIGHTS The ability to create, distribute and exploit knowledge is increasingly central to competitive advantage, wealth creation and better standards of living. The STI Scoreboard 2001 presents the

More information

What is Democratic Socialism?

What is Democratic Socialism? What is Democratic Socialism? SOURCE: https://www.dsausa.org/about-us/what-is-democratic-socialism/ What is Democratic Socialism? Democratic socialists believe that both the economy and society should

More information

Chapter 2: The U.S. Economy: A Global View

Chapter 2: The U.S. Economy: A Global View Chapter 2: The U.S. Economy: A Global View 1. Approximately how much of the world's output does the United States produce? A. 4 percent. B. 20 percent. C. 30 percent. D. 1.5 percent. The United States

More information

13 Arguments for Liberal Capitalism in 13 Minutes

13 Arguments for Liberal Capitalism in 13 Minutes 13 Arguments for Liberal Capitalism in 13 Minutes Stephen R.C. Hicks Argument 1: Liberal capitalism increases freedom. First, defining our terms. By Liberalism, we mean a network of principles that are

More information

Cooperative Business and Innovative Rural Development: Synergies between Commercial and Academic Partners C-BIRD

Cooperative Business and Innovative Rural Development: Synergies between Commercial and Academic Partners C-BIRD Building the mindset for social entrepreneurship: From a global vision to a local understanding and action Assoc. Prof. Darina Zaimova Faculty of Economics, Trakia University, Stara Zagora Agenda Why social

More information

The EU debate #1: Identity

The EU debate #1: Identity The EU debate #1: Identity Q: Britain is a European nation. A: Geography has given Britain a shared cultural history with continental Europe. From the Roman Empire, to the Renaissance, and now through

More information

In class, we have framed poverty in four different ways: poverty in terms of

In class, we have framed poverty in four different ways: poverty in terms of Sandra Yu In class, we have framed poverty in four different ways: poverty in terms of deviance, dependence, economic growth and capability, and political disenfranchisement. In this paper, I will focus

More information

ECON 1100 Global Economics (Section 02) Exam #1 Spring 2009 (Version C) Multiple Choice Questions ( 2. points each):

ECON 1100 Global Economics (Section 02) Exam #1 Spring 2009 (Version C) Multiple Choice Questions ( 2. points each): ECON 1100 Global Economics (Section 02) Exam #1 Spring 2009 (Version C) 1 Multiple Choice Questions ( 2 2 points each): 1. The states that an action should be taken if and only if the additional benefits

More information

Justice Needs in Uganda. Legal problems in daily life

Justice Needs in Uganda. Legal problems in daily life Justice Needs in Uganda 2016 Legal problems in daily life JUSTICE NEEDS IN UGANDA - 2016 3 Introduction This research was supported by the Swedish Embassy in Uganda and The Hague Institute for Global Justice.

More information

Chapter 6: Economic Systems. Economics: how people choose to use scarce resources in order to produce and buy the goods they want.

Chapter 6: Economic Systems. Economics: how people choose to use scarce resources in order to produce and buy the goods they want. Chapter 6: Economic Systems Economics: how people choose to use scarce resources in order to produce and buy the goods they want. 3 Concepts of Economics: Goods (the something you want to buy) Capital

More information

Stiglitz: Europe's View on Inequality

Stiglitz: Europe's View on Inequality Stiglitz: Europe's View on Inequality June 17, 2014 by Marianne Brunet When you approach a crowd conversing over coffee at an economics conference, you don t normally expect to hear them giddily saying:

More information

Chapter 7 Institutions and economics growth

Chapter 7 Institutions and economics growth Chapter 7 Institutions and economics growth 7.1 Institutions: Promoting productive activity and growth Institutions are the laws, social norms, traditions, religious beliefs, and other established rules

More information

Article at a glance. To comment on this article, visit the CIPE Development Blog:

Article at a glance. To comment on this article, visit the CIPE Development Blog: ECONOMICREFORM Feature Service February 28, 2013 Mary M. Shirley President Ronald Coase Institute Article at a glance The gradual emergence of economic institutions encouraged impersonal, long-distance

More information

ECONOMIC SYSTEMS AND DECISION MAKING. Understanding Economics - Chapter 2

ECONOMIC SYSTEMS AND DECISION MAKING. Understanding Economics - Chapter 2 ECONOMIC SYSTEMS AND DECISION MAKING Understanding Economics - Chapter 2 ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Chapter 2, Lesson 1 ECONOMIC SYSTEMS Traditional Market Command Mixed! Economic System organized way a society

More information

Rewriting the Rules of the Market Economy to Achieve Shared Prosperity. Joseph E. Stiglitz New York June 2016

Rewriting the Rules of the Market Economy to Achieve Shared Prosperity. Joseph E. Stiglitz New York June 2016 Rewriting the Rules of the Market Economy to Achieve Shared Prosperity Joseph E. Stiglitz New York June 2016 Enormous growth in inequality Especially in US, and countries that have followed US model Multiple

More information

Assembly Line For the first time, Henry Ford s entire Highland Park, Michigan automobile factory is run on a continuously moving assembly line when

Assembly Line For the first time, Henry Ford s entire Highland Park, Michigan automobile factory is run on a continuously moving assembly line when Assembly Line For the first time, Henry Ford s entire Highland Park, Michigan automobile factory is run on a continuously moving assembly line when the chassis the automobile s frame is assembled using

More information

Industrial Revolution

Industrial Revolution ECONOMIC SYSTEM Industrial Revolution During 1760-1820, a period of major industrialization occurred beginning in Britain and then spread throughout the world. New steam and water powered inventions made

More information

Social Economy of Republic of Korea: Conditions of Success and Policy Direction

Social Economy of Republic of Korea: Conditions of Success and Policy Direction Social Economy of Republic of Korea: Conditions of Success and Policy Direction57 Social Economy of Republic of Korea: Conditions of Success and Policy Direction KIM Jong-Gul (Professor, Graduate School

More information

The Economics of Globalization: A Labor View. Thomas Palley, Assistant Director of Public Policy, AFL-CIO

The Economics of Globalization: A Labor View. Thomas Palley, Assistant Director of Public Policy, AFL-CIO The Economics of Globalization: A Labor View 1 Thomas Palley, Assistant Director of Public Policy, AFL-CIO Published in Teich, Nelsom, McEaney, and Lita (eds.), Science and Technology Policy Yearbook 2000,

More information

Center on Capitalism and Society Columbia University Working Paper No Toward an Economics of the Slowdown in the West

Center on Capitalism and Society Columbia University Working Paper No Toward an Economics of the Slowdown in the West Center on Capitalism and Society Columbia University Working Paper No. 112 Toward an Economics of the Slowdown in the West Edmund Phelps February 12, 2019 Adapted from a speech given at Paris-Dauphine

More information

NOBLE MOBILITY CHARTER OF CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY

NOBLE MOBILITY CHARTER OF CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY NOBLECARE NOBLE MOBILITY CHARTER OF CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY WHO WE ARE NOBLE MOBILITY is a leading provider of moving and relocation services in the corporate market. The company s core values;

More information

Remarks by President Trump to the World Economic Forum Davos, Switzerland

Remarks by President Trump to the World Economic Forum Davos, Switzerland https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/remarks-president-trump-world-economic-forum-davosswitzerland/ Remarks by President Trump to the World Economic Forum Davos, Switzerland Issued on: January

More information

N O R T H A F R I C A A N D T H E E U : P A R T N E R S H I P F O R R E F O R M A N D G R O W T H

N O R T H A F R I C A A N D T H E E U : P A R T N E R S H I P F O R R E F O R M A N D G R O W T H R E P O R T REGIONAL PROGRAM POLITICAL DIALOGUE SOUTH MEDITERRANEAN N O R T H A F R I C A A N D T H E E U : P A R T N E R S H I P F O R R E F O R M A N D G R O W T H Compilation of the findings and recommendations

More information

The Importance of Global Workers in Canada s ICT and Digital Media Industries

The Importance of Global Workers in Canada s ICT and Digital Media Industries The Importance of Global Workers in Canada s ICT and Digital Media Industries January 2014 The Information and Communications Technology (ICT) and Digital Media industries are among the fastest growing

More information

End user involvement in Internet Governance: why and how

End user involvement in Internet Governance: why and how ITU Workshop on Internet Governance Geneva, 26-27 February 2004 End user involvement in Internet Governance: why and how Vittorio Bertola vb (at) bertola.eu.org Abstract This paper is not about ITU or

More information

Political Resolution IndustriALL Global Union s 2 nd Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-7 October 2016

Political Resolution IndustriALL Global Union s 2 nd Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-7 October 2016 Political Resolution IndustriALL Global Union s 2 nd Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-7 October 2016 Introduction It is the firm conviction of IndustriALL that all working women and men have the right

More information

Chapter 17: CAPITALISM AND ITS CRITICS:

Chapter 17: CAPITALISM AND ITS CRITICS: Chapter 17: CAPITALISM AND ITS CRITICS: Objectives: o We will examine the philosophy of wealth such as Social Darwinism that justified the excess of the time. o We will examine the critics of the new industrial

More information

* Economies and Values

* Economies and Values Unit One CB * Economies and Values Four different economic systems have developed to address the key economic questions. Each system reflects the different prioritization of economic goals. It also reflects

More information

Economic Freedom Country Audit Serbia 2016

Economic Freedom Country Audit Serbia 2016 Libertarian Club Libek Economic Freedom Country Audit Serbia 2016 research education advocacy libek.org.rs Table of Contents Introduction 3 About Fraser Institute 4 Size of Government 5 Sound Money 6 Legal

More information

Skills for Social Entrepreneurs in the Third Sector

Skills for Social Entrepreneurs in the Third Sector Skills for Social Entrepreneurs in the Third Sector INTELLECTUAL OUTPUT 1: REVIEW OF VET PROVISION FOR SOCIAL ENTERPRISE AND ENTREPRENEURIALISM TRANSNATIONAL LEVEL REPORT Introduction to the Skills SETS

More information

Post-2008 Crisis in Labor Standards: Prospects for Labor Regulation Around the World

Post-2008 Crisis in Labor Standards: Prospects for Labor Regulation Around the World Post-2008 Crisis in Labor Standards: Prospects for Labor Regulation Around the World Michael J. Piore David W. Skinner Professor of Political Economy Department of Economics Massachusetts Institute of

More information

Last time we discussed a stylized version of the realist view of global society.

Last time we discussed a stylized version of the realist view of global society. Political Philosophy, Spring 2003, 1 The Terrain of a Global Normative Order 1. Realism and Normative Order Last time we discussed a stylized version of the realist view of global society. According to

More information

Business and the global economy

Business and the global economy International Chamber of Commerce The world business organization Business and the global economy ICC statement on behalf of world business to the Heads of State and Government attending the Evian Summit,

More information

Week Day. Understanding Profits and Losses Profit, Loss, and Helping Others. CSE Part I: Twelve Key Elements of Economics

Week Day. Understanding Profits and Losses Profit, Loss, and Helping Others. CSE Part I: Twelve Key Elements of Economics Understanding Profits and Losses Profit, Loss, and Helping Others Week Day 2 CSE Part I: Twelve Key Elements of Economics ELEMENT 7 PROFITS DIRECT BUSINESSES TOWARD PRODUCTIVE ACTIVITIES THAT INCREASE

More information

Market Systems Focus: Capitalism and Free Enterprise

Market Systems Focus: Capitalism and Free Enterprise Market Systems Focus: Capitalism and Free Enterprise Traditional Economies: Survival! An economic system in which people produce and distribute goods according to customs or traditions handed down from

More information

GLOBALIZATION S CHALLENGES FOR THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES

GLOBALIZATION S CHALLENGES FOR THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES GLOBALIZATION S CHALLENGES FOR THE DEVELOPED COUNTRIES Shreekant G. Joag St. John s University New York INTRODUCTION By the end of the World War II, US and Europe, having experienced the disastrous consequences

More information

Stuck in Transition? STUCK IN TRANSITION? TRANSITION REPORT Jeromin Zettelmeyer Deputy Chief Economist. Turkey country visit 3-6 December 2013

Stuck in Transition? STUCK IN TRANSITION? TRANSITION REPORT Jeromin Zettelmeyer Deputy Chief Economist. Turkey country visit 3-6 December 2013 TRANSITION REPORT 2013 www.tr.ebrd.com STUCK IN TRANSITION? Stuck in Transition? Turkey country visit 3-6 December 2013 Jeromin Zettelmeyer Deputy Chief Economist Piroska M. Nagy Director for Country Strategy

More information

DECREE OF THE PRESIDENT OF UKRAINE 532/2013

DECREE OF THE PRESIDENT OF UKRAINE 532/2013 DECREE OF THE PRESIDENT OF UKRAINE 532/2013 On the Strategy for the state youth policy development for the period up to 2020 With a view to create the appropriate conditions for attracting young people

More information

It is a real pleasure for me to participate in this panel. I hope to bring to bear an economist s perspective on these issues.

It is a real pleasure for me to participate in this panel. I hope to bring to bear an economist s perspective on these issues. Joseph E. Stiglitz s address to panel on Defending Human Rights (revised) Geneva, December 3, 2013 It is a real pleasure for me to participate in this panel. I hope to bring to bear an economist s perspective

More information

7 Economic consequences of Brexit strategy for Hungary

7 Economic consequences of Brexit strategy for Hungary 7 Economic consequences of Brexit strategy for Hungary CERS-HAS and CEPR Potential effects of Brexit on the Hungarian economy Direct trade between Hungary and the UK has been quite modest, which means

More information

A noted economist has claimed, American prosperity and American free. enterprise are both highly unusual in the world, and we should not overlook

A noted economist has claimed, American prosperity and American free. enterprise are both highly unusual in the world, and we should not overlook Free Enterprise A noted economist has claimed, American prosperity and American free enterprise are both highly unusual in the world, and we should not overlook the possibility that the two are connected.

More information

and government interventions, and explain how they represent contrasting political choices

and government interventions, and explain how they represent contrasting political choices Chapter 9: Political Economies Learning Objectives After reading this chapter, students should be able to do the following: 9.1: Describe three concrete ways in which national economies vary, the abstract

More information

Who wants to be an entrepreneur?

Who wants to be an entrepreneur? entrepreneurship Key findings: Germany Who wants to be an entrepreneur? Entrepreneurship is crucial to economic development and to promoting social integration and reducing inequalities. OECD Entrepreneurship

More information

rules, including whether and how the state should intervene in market activity.

rules, including whether and how the state should intervene in market activity. Focus on Economics No. 86, 2 th March 201 Competition policy: a question of enforcement Authors: Clemens Domnick, phone +9 (0) 69 731-176, Dr Katrin Ullrich, phone +9 (0) 69 731-9791, research@kfw.de Competition

More information

Internet Governance and G20

Internet Governance and G20 Internet Governance and G20 Izmir, Turkey 14 June 2015 Thanks and greetings, I am pleased to be here today representing the Global Commission on Internet Governance, launched by CIGI and Chatham House.

More information

Political Resolution IndustriALL Global Union s 2 nd Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-7 October 2016

Political Resolution IndustriALL Global Union s 2 nd Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-7 October 2016 Political Resolution IndustriALL Global Union s 2 nd Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 5-7 October 2016 Introduction It is the firm conviction of IndustriALL that all working women and men have the right

More information

The Earn, Learn, Return Model: A New Framework for Managing the Movement of Workers in the APEC Region to Address Business Needs

The Earn, Learn, Return Model: A New Framework for Managing the Movement of Workers in the APEC Region to Address Business Needs The Earn, Learn, Return Model: A New Framework for Managing the Movement of Workers in the APEC Region to Address Business Needs EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Skills shortages and mismatches remain an acute concern

More information

Newcomers new challenges and new audiences

Newcomers new challenges and new audiences Newcomers new challenges and new audiences Presentation at IFLA Satellite Meeting, Copenhagen 17. August 2010 By Elisabeth Moltke, project manager emo@statsbiblioteket.dk Danish Library Center for Integration,

More information

The role of the private sector in generating new investments, employment and financing for development

The role of the private sector in generating new investments, employment and financing for development The role of the private sector in generating new investments, employment and financing for development Matt Liu, Deputy Investment Promotion Director Made in Africa Initiative Every developing country

More information

A Role for the Private Sector in 21 st Century Global Migration Policy

A Role for the Private Sector in 21 st Century Global Migration Policy A Role for the Private Sector in 21 st Century Global Migration Policy Submission by the World Economic Forum Global Future Council on Migration to the Global Compact on Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

More information

Four theories of justice

Four theories of justice Four theories of justice Peter Singer and the Requirement to Aid Others in Need Peter Singer (cf. Famine, affluence, and morality, Philosophy and Public Affairs, 1:229-243, 1972. / The Life you can Save,

More information

Executive summary. Part I. Major trends in wages

Executive summary. Part I. Major trends in wages Executive summary Part I. Major trends in wages Lowest wage growth globally in 2017 since 2008 Global wage growth in 2017 was not only lower than in 2016, but fell to its lowest growth rate since 2008,

More information

: a lost decade for the world economy? Michael Kitson

: a lost decade for the world economy? Michael Kitson 2010-2020: a lost decade for the world economy? Michael Kitson The day is not far off when the economic problem will take the back seat where it belongs, and the arena of the heart and the head will be

More information

Scotland s Vision for Social Enterprise 2025

Scotland s Vision for Social Enterprise 2025 Scotland s Vision for Social Enterprise 2025 Moving Social Enterprise in from the Margins to the Mainstream A Paper from CEIS, Community Enterprise, Firstport, HISEZ, InspirAlba, Senscot, Social Enterprise

More information

CPG2B/BPZ6C BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT. Unit : I V

CPG2B/BPZ6C BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT. Unit : I V CPG2B/BPZ6C BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT Unit : I V UNIT I The concept of business environment its nature and significance brief overview of political, cultural & legal economic and social environment and their

More information

Phil 108, April 24, 2014 Climate Change

Phil 108, April 24, 2014 Climate Change Phil 108, April 24, 2014 Climate Change The problem of inefficiency: Emissions of greenhouse gases involve a (negative) externality. Roughly: a harm or cost that isn t paid for. For example, when I pay

More information

How s Life in Germany?

How s Life in Germany? How s Life in Germany? November 2017 Relative to other OECD countries, Germany performs well across most well-being dimensions. Household net adjusted disposable income is above the OECD average, but household

More information

GDP Per Capita. Constant 2000 US$

GDP Per Capita. Constant 2000 US$ GDP Per Capita Constant 2000 US$ Country US$ Japan 38,609 United States 36,655 United Kingdom 26,363 Canada 24,688 Germany 23,705 France 23,432 Mexico 5,968 Russian Federation 2,286 China 1,323 India 538

More information

How s Life in Denmark?

How s Life in Denmark? How s Life in Denmark? November 2017 Relative to other OECD countries, Denmark generally performs very well across the different well-being dimensions. Although average household net adjusted disposable

More information

Hearing on Agricultural Labor: From H-2A to a Workable Agricultural Guestworker Program

Hearing on Agricultural Labor: From H-2A to a Workable Agricultural Guestworker Program Testimony of Mike Brown President, National Chicken Council On Behalf of the Food Manufacturers Immigration Coalition Before the House Judiciary Committee Subcommittee on Immigration and Border Security

More information

This fear of approaching social turmoil or even revolution leads the middle class Progressive reformers to a

This fear of approaching social turmoil or even revolution leads the middle class Progressive reformers to a Progressives and Progressive Reform Progressives were troubled by the social conditions and economic exploitation that accompanied the rapid industrialization and urbanization of the late 19 th century.

More information

ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN RURAL AREAS: CASE OF ROMANIA

ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN RURAL AREAS: CASE OF ROMANIA 138 Entrepreneurship and tourism development in rural areas: case of Romania ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND TOURISM DEVELOPMENT IN RURAL AREAS: CASE OF ROMANIA Nicolae Nemirschi, Adrian Craciun 1 Abstract Interest

More information

Intention to stay and labor migration of Albanian doctors and nurses

Intention to stay and labor migration of Albanian doctors and nurses Intention to stay and labor migration of Albanian doctors and nurses Ertila DRUGA 3 rd Conference, LSEE Research Network on Social Cohesion in SEE Social Cohesion and Economic Governance 6-7 April 2017,

More information

Immigration and Multiculturalism

Immigration and Multiculturalism A New Progressive Agenda Jean Chrétien Immigration and Multiculturalism Jean Chrétien Lessons from Canada vol 2.2 progressive politics 23 A New Progressive Agenda Jean Chrétien Canada s cultural, ethnic

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Which of the following is true of the capitalist system? A) The market system coordinates economic

More information

Who wants to be an entrepreneur?

Who wants to be an entrepreneur? entrepreneurship Key findings: Italy Who wants to be an entrepreneur? Entrepreneurship is crucial to economic development, promoting social integration and reducing inequalities. OECD Entrepreneurship

More information

The State, the Market, And Development. Joseph E. Stiglitz World Institute for Development Economics Research September 2015

The State, the Market, And Development. Joseph E. Stiglitz World Institute for Development Economics Research September 2015 The State, the Market, And Development Joseph E. Stiglitz World Institute for Development Economics Research September 2015 Rethinking the role of the state Influenced by major successes and failures of

More information

CHAPTER 19 MARKET SYSTEMS AND NORMATIVE CLAIMS Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition

CHAPTER 19 MARKET SYSTEMS AND NORMATIVE CLAIMS Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition CHAPTER 19 MARKET SYSTEMS AND NORMATIVE CLAIMS Microeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.), 2 nd Edition Chapter Summary This final chapter brings together many of the themes previous chapters have explored

More information

GENDER AWARE TRADE POLICY A SPRINGBOARD FOR WOMEN S ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT

GENDER AWARE TRADE POLICY A SPRINGBOARD FOR WOMEN S ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT GENDER AWARE TRADE POLICY A SPRINGBOARD FOR WOMEN S ECONOMIC EMPOWERMENT 1 " Action is needed to better integrate women into the international trading system. All the evidence suggests that giving an equal

More information

Openness and Poverty Reduction in the Long and Short Run. Mark R. Rosenzweig. Harvard University. October 2003

Openness and Poverty Reduction in the Long and Short Run. Mark R. Rosenzweig. Harvard University. October 2003 Openness and Poverty Reduction in the Long and Short Run Mark R. Rosenzweig Harvard University October 2003 Prepared for the Conference on The Future of Globalization Yale University. October 10-11, 2003

More information

Age of Reform Historical Investigation A.P. U.S. History

Age of Reform Historical Investigation A.P. U.S. History Age of Reform Historical Investigation A.P. U.S. History Investigation Question: What caused the widespread interest in reform from 1825-1850. In what ways was the spirit of reform manifested? In what

More information

CH 19. Name: Class: Date: Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

CH 19. Name: Class: Date: Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. Class: Date: CH 19 Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. In the United States, the poorest 20 percent of the household receive approximately

More information

Measuring the Returns to Rural Entrepreneurship Development

Measuring the Returns to Rural Entrepreneurship Development Measuring the Returns to Rural Entrepreneurship Development Thomas G. Johnson Frank Miller Professor and Director of Academic and Analytic Programs, Rural Policy Research Institute Paper presented at the

More information

It s Working A COMMONSENSE GUIDE OF SOCIALISM. education, growth, opportunity

It s Working A COMMONSENSE GUIDE OF SOCIALISM. education, growth, opportunity It s Working education, growth, opportunity A COMMONSENSE GUIDE T O T H E FA L S E P R O M I S E S OF SOCIALISM 1 Income equality! Everyone contributes an equal amount and equally shares in rewards! Everyone

More information

Equality of Resources. In discussing libertarianism, I distinguished two kinds of criticisms of

Equality of Resources. In discussing libertarianism, I distinguished two kinds of criticisms of Justice, Fall 2002, 1 Equality of Resources 1. Why Equality? In discussing libertarianism, I distinguished two kinds of criticisms of programs of law and public policy that aim to address inequalities

More information

Policy brief: Making Europe More Competitive for Highly- Skilled Immigration - Reflections on the EU Blue Card 1

Policy brief: Making Europe More Competitive for Highly- Skilled Immigration - Reflections on the EU Blue Card 1 Policy brief: Making Europe More Competitive for Highly- Skilled Immigration - Reflections on the EU Blue Card 1 Migration policy brief: No. 2 Introduction According to the Lisbon Strategy, the EU aims

More information

Economic Perspective. Macroeconomics I ECON 309 S. Cunningham

Economic Perspective. Macroeconomics I ECON 309 S. Cunningham Economic Perspective Macroeconomics I ECON 309 S. Cunningham Methodological Individualism Classical liberalism, classical economics and neoclassical economics are based on the conception that society is

More information

Social Science 1000: Study Questions. Part A: 50% - 50 Minutes

Social Science 1000: Study Questions. Part A: 50% - 50 Minutes 1 Social Science 1000: Study Questions Part A: 50% - 50 Minutes Six of the following items will appear on the exam. You will be asked to define and explain the significance for the course of five of them.

More information

UNION COLLEGE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS, FALL 2004 ECO 146 SEMINAR IN GLOBAL ECONOMIC ISSUES GLOBALIZATION AND LABOR MARKETS

UNION COLLEGE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS, FALL 2004 ECO 146 SEMINAR IN GLOBAL ECONOMIC ISSUES GLOBALIZATION AND LABOR MARKETS UNION COLLEGE DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS, FALL 2004 ECO 146 SEMINAR IN GLOBAL ECONOMIC ISSUES GLOBALIZATION AND LABOR MARKETS The Issues wage inequality between skilled and unskilled labor the effects of

More information

Getting a Handle on the Super PAC Problem. Bob Bauer. Stanford Law Symposium. February 5, 2016

Getting a Handle on the Super PAC Problem. Bob Bauer. Stanford Law Symposium. February 5, 2016 Getting a Handle on the Super PAC Problem Bob Bauer Stanford Law Symposium February 5, 2016 The Super PACs are the bêtes noires of campaign finance reform, except for those who are quite keen on them,

More information

Proposed Amendments to the Immigrant Entrepreneur and Investor Programs

Proposed Amendments to the Immigrant Entrepreneur and Investor Programs July 20, 2000 Linda MacDougall Business Immigration Division Selection Branch Citizenship and Immigration Canada 300 Slater Street, 7 th floor Ottawa ON K1A 1L1 Dear Ms. MacDougall, RE: Proposed Amendments

More information

Living in a Globalized World

Living in a Globalized World Living in a Globalized World Ms.R.A.Zahra studjisocjali.com Page 1 Globalisation Is the sharing and mixing of different cultures, so much so that every society has a plurality of cultures and is called

More information

EU and Russian Economic Prospects Comparative analysis Jon Hellevig International Seliger Youth Forum

EU and Russian Economic Prospects Comparative analysis Jon Hellevig International Seliger Youth Forum EU and Russian Economic Prospects Comparative analysis Jon Hellevig International Seliger Youth Forum 26.7.2013 "Hellevig is always too optimistic about Russia" ...But compared with the real results of

More information

Dangers in a Repeat of Historic Corporatism

Dangers in a Repeat of Historic Corporatism The Center on Capitalism and Society Columbia University Working Paper No. 93 * Dangers in a Repeat of Historic Corporatism Edmund Phelps January 2017 Abstract In the view of many commentators, we are

More information